The union representing service workers at the University of Minnesota has authorized a strike, leaders announced Monday, noting that 93% of its members have voted in favor of the action.
The Teamsters Local 320 union sued the university and its Board of Regents last month over claims of inadequate pay and employee discrimination that allegedly have violated the Public Employment Labor Relations Act. The workers involved in the potential strike help all over campus to serve food, clean buildings, collect waste, provide general maintenance and more.
The Teamsters union voted last week, and the strike would involve 1,500 workers and affect more than 60,000 students at the U.
At a news conference Monday, Teamsters Local 320 Secretary and Treasurer Brian Aldes announced that the union will file its intent to strike Tuesday morning, and then begin a 10-day mediation period. If that period passes without successful negotiations, the strike could begin as soon as Oct. 22.
"I think they should strike, and every student that I've ever talked to here would stand with them," Maddy Stross, a freshman at the U, said. "We see the same people that work [in the dining halls] every single day ... and they don't get paid enough to be there 24/7."
The university said it has been negotiating with the union since June. In a message sent to faculty, staff and students on Friday, the U's Vice President for Human Resources Kenneth Horstman said the university has offered a pay raise that would increase the average starting wage for a Teamsters employee to $21.67 an hour.
"We want all of our union employees to feel valued and to earn market-rate pay for their work," Horstman said.
The union responded by saying this average pay raise would not keep up with inflation and would leave many workers with a wage below $20 an hour. The union rejected the proposal, which was the university's best and final offer.